|
Published: May 08, 2008 11:07 am
Hawthorn Hill
By RICHARD J. deROSA
Individualism
There is a lot of talk about
change these days. We hear
it from presidential candidates
and we read about it in
the papers and hear about it
on radio. I do not know about
anyone else, but I have never
altered the way I conduct my
life because of what a politician
has said. The people
who have influenced me are
friends, family members,
teachers, and writers. What
has not changed is that individuals
make the most lasting
differences.
If we are to reverse the effects
of global warming, we
will do it not because governments
decree we ought to,
but because of the cumulative
effect of individual
thought and action. Top
down pronouncements are
all well and good. Ultimately,
as JFK so presciently put it
many years ago, the individual’s
obligations trump those
of government. All too often,
we focus our being a government
“of the people” while
ignoring the “by the people”
phrase, the one that reminds
us of our communal obligations
to one another.
As despairing as things
can be from time to time, anecdotal
evidence appears to
indicate that many individuals
are changing their habits
because they are convinced
that climate change is real,
that fossil fuels will not last
forever, and that the harm
inflicted on the planet as a
direct result of oil and its byproducts
will be nigh impossible
to correct or reverse unless
we act now. These are
abundant signs that give one
reason for optimism.
As has always been the
case, individual action has a
radiant and immediate effect
far more infectious than a
thick tome that few have the
time or inclination to read.
When it comes to reading,
what is better for the soul —
and the intellect? A thousand
page bill or a well-written
novel or poetry collection?
Actually, I would rather read
a manual on raising chickens.
It makes much more
practical sense. For that
matter, the nature poems
and many books and essays
that I have read over the
years have done more to enliven
my environmental consciousness
than the words or
writings of any politician.
Speaking of chickens, I
did attend a workshop on
backyard poultry management
the other day. We are
going away for a few weeks.
When we come back, I will
build a coop of sorts and then
order half a dozen pullets.
When asked why we were
there, most indicated a commitment
to a more sustainable
lifestyle, as well as a
taste for fresh eggs and organically
raised chicken in
the stew pot or on the barbecue.
When the question of
where to get chickens came
up, one person indicated that
a local farm store was experiencing
an exponential increase
in chicken orders.
Why? Well, because more
and more people want to
raise their own poultry and
vegetables and generally reconfigure
their own lives so
as to reduce their dependence
on external sources.
This is not an isolated
phenomenon. Over the past
several months I have attended
several workshops
where I have either learned
or relearned the basics of
backyard fruit and berry production,
tree grafting, the
value of high tunnel gardening
and, because I see it as
wholly compatible with a
commitment to self-reliance,
a hunter safety course. The
fact is each of us does hunt.
Some do it in the woods; others
do it is the supermarket.
In conversations with
people at all of these workshops,
it appears that most
are motivated by a genuine
concern for the environment.
Not everyone has jumped on
the bandwagon, but the numbers
increase daily and that
is very encouraging. We
heard a lot of grumbling
about the price of fuel. A
news report earlier this
morning indicated a drop in
SUV sales. That is a good
thing, as least from my vantage
point.
The price of a gallon of
fuel is high, and likely to increase.
I know quite a few
people who have opted for
small, fuel-efficient cars not
because of fuel costs, but because
of a firm commitment
to planetary healing. Whatever
the reason for the demise
of SUV’s, it is a good
thing.
The good news is that individuals
countrywide are
making changes and looking
for ways to live self-reliant
lives that contribute to a
healthy, regenerative environment.
The sports section
of The New York Times recently
did a feature on a burly
Major League Baseball
player who has become a
vegetarian. In light of the
scandals of the past few
years where bulking up with
steroids, hardly a healthy or
morally defensible practice,
has scarred baseball for
years to come, perhaps this
one individual will be the
first of many to choose garbanzo
beans over diet supplements.
Finally, despite my often
being characterized as a liberal,
it seems to me that liberalism
of the kind I espouse,
one that sees government’s
role as that of ensuring the
durability of individual freedom
of thought and choice
constrained only by the curtailment
of specific liberties
(Mill said it all years ago),
envisions a society wherein
individuals make the lasting
differences, not politicians.
There is a place for thoughtful,
concise, and coherent law
in a civilized society. But in
the end it is all up to us, you
and me, one at a time.
|
|